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An African Princess, still trusting in our roots.

Mirriam Nzunda - House of Stars Media Limited | LinkedIn 02/02/2026

Operational & Growth Blueprint

Consultant: Mirriam Nzunda
My Focus: African-owned SMEs
Wellness enterprises,
NGOs seeking financial and operational clarity.

Package Overview
This package provides your business a structured and actionable approach to streamline your operations, clarify finances, and ultimately grow the business sustainably.

Deliverables
Complete business health assessment.

Financial review: cash flow, profit/loss/income & expenses, financial position.
Operational review: workflow efficiency, roles, reporting.
Market alignment: branding, sales channels, client targeting.

Custom Growth Plan

A step-by-step plan to increase your revenue and reduce inefficiencies. You will be provided:
Clear action items for the next 90 days.
Tools and templates for operations and financial management.
Implementation Support
Weekly 1-hour check-ins for 4 weeks.
Email support for questions during implementation.
*Bonus in the premium package:
A template for monthly financial and operational dashboard
A guide on integrating authenticity,accountability and order into business operations

Pricing
Standard Package: ZMW 7,500 (~$450)
Premium Package: ZMW 15,000 (~$900) (includes extended 6-week support + detailed reporting templates)
Contact / Booking:
Email: [email protected]
Phone/WhatsApp: +260964015662
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mirriam-nzunda-a774562a3?utm_source=share&utm_campaign=share_via&utm_content=profile&utm_medium=android_app

I help businesses and other enterprises systematize operations, clarify finances, and grow revenue sustainably. With my Operational Clarity & Growth Blueprint, you’ll gain actionable insights, ready-to-use templates, and guidance to confidently scale your business without stress or guesswork.

Mirriam Nzunda - House of Stars Media Limited | LinkedIn I am a business and finance consultant specializing in strategic growth, operational… · Experience: House of Stars Media Limited · Education: Premier Accountancy · Location: Lusaka · 12 connections on LinkedIn. View Mirriam Nzunda’s profile on LinkedIn, a professional community of 1 billion ...

08/10/2025

They said, “You function on African time.”
I said, “No, I work with ancestral timing.”

My rhythm follows the drum, not the clock.
I do not rush greatness; I prepare it.
I am Nampembela, I am Mbuzi. And like my totemic animal the goat, I rise to places others cannot reach. Always ready, always guided and always crowned, to defend one and all.

15/09/2025

Today, I want to share the "Pillars of African Financial Freedom" as applied by our ancestors but keeping in mind their modern day application. They are in no particular order of importance because all of them are necessary for us to foster a thriving community as well as a healthy economy for ourselves and the generations to come.

1. Land & Resources
Land has always been our core inheritance, the source of food, wealth, and continuity. The system names it as one of the factors of production. For us to be financially free, we need to secure land at micro level and advocate for our commercial land rights at macro level. We have to engage in farming as well as natural resource ownership in order to establish long-term wealth and independence as a continent.

2. Trade & Exchange
Prior to oppression, we thrived through barter, market days, and cross-border trade routes. Today we can use entrepreneurship, e-commerce, intra-African trade as the vehicles through which we foster trade among ourselves in order to create sustainable income flows throughout the continent.

3. Communal Wealth
Wealth was shared among us through extended family, clans, and community systems. In today, cooperatives, savings groups (village banking), SACCOs can serve the same purpose on an even more expansive scale thereby enabling collective growth, continuity and safety nets for more people than sole proprietorship does.

4. Skills, Craftsmen, Blacksmiths, healers, farmers, artisans, etc.
These people held economic power because they carve the fabric of our environment and are pivotal in the discussions of development. We have to realize that countries are corporations and subsidiaries of the parent company, the continent. Africa is not poor because we lack resources, but because we do not know how to utilize those resources to our benefit including our own skill sets. We cure this by monetizing our skills, getting up to speed with tech-based services, etc and generally creating multiple income streams.

5. Spiritual Integrity
Wealth is tied to morality, rituals, and honoring ancestors. We have to practice ethical business, fair trade and legacy building for us to achieve prosperity with dignity and continuity.

6. Resource Preservation
Nothing should be wasted that can be used. Seeds, herbs, and tools were and should be passed through generations. We must create Investments, savings as well as asset management accounts to prepare for our future which does not end with us. We must practice reuse and recycle to preserve our environment and seek renewable use materials for production. This creates a framework for Intergenerational security.

Our ancestors thrived on trade systems rooted in community trust. Today, I help modern entrepreneurs build and sustain businesses with the same principles. Book a mini-consult slot today, inbox for any further details.

15/09/2025

Our ancestors didn’t have pharmacies, yet they lived long, strong lives. What was the secret? Herbs like hibiscus, cinnamon, and fenugreek, to mention a few that were treasured in rituals and daily brews for vitality.

Inspired by this wisdom, Azaa Wellness has crafted the Heart Vitality Tea and The Heart Wellness Tea, blends rooted in the very herbs our people trusted. DM the number on the post to reserve your limited batch today.

Today, heart disease and high blood pressure are silently claiming lives around the world. Even those who feel strong,well and fine need to nourish the heart, for prevention is the true medicine.

Azaa’s "Heart Vitality Tea" for medicinal purposes and our "Heart Wellness Tea" are both carefully crafted from a blend of herbs that are :
1. Rich in antioxidants
2. Circulation boosters
3. Natural cholesterol balancers.

Practical Daily Use

For patients (People with High Blood Pressure, Cholesterol or circulation concerns) our Heart Vitality Tea helps to manage blood pressure, support healthy cholesterol, and ease circulation.

For the fine and healthy, our Heart Wellness Tea preserves your heart strength, improves stamina, and ensures vitality for years ahead.

Both teas come in Batches of 20 sachets.
Heart Vitality pack
Heart Wellness pack

Serving:
1. Empty 1 sachet into a cup
2. Pour 1 cup of boiling water over the herbs
3. Strain and sip slowly.

Drink one cup 5 days a week or daily, warm and intentional — let the herbs remind you that your heart is the kingdom of the creator within you. Protect it, strengthen it, and honor it.

👉 Available now in limited Batches. DM us today to reserve your Heart Wholeness Tea.

Call or WhatsApp 964015662

12/09/2025

Africans Are The Highest Order on African Soil. This Is A Fact.

Lets Begin With Our Physical Identity:

Our African body is a living testament to our resilience, endurance, and beauty. From our tightly coiled hair, crafted by nature to shield us from the fierce sun, to the richness of our skin that harmonizes with the land itself, our physical identity is unmatched.
Our features are not only markers of our ancestry but also a reminder that we are perfectly adapted to thrive on this soil. The world has long imitated, studied, and marveled at the African physique; yet it is here, at home, that it must be celebrated as the supreme standard.

Lets Talk About The Integrity of Our Spirit and Our Moral Code:

Beyond our physical, we have our spiritual fabric which is woven with integrity, reverence for ancestors, and a deeply ingrained sense of communal responsibility. Where other systems fracture individuals into isolation, African traditions bind us together with codes of honor, respect, and accountability. Our spirituality is not something ornamental, it is functional, guiding our communities toward balance with nature and one another. This integrity cannot be bought, borrowed, or imposed; it is inherently African.

Let Us Highlight The Brilliance of Our Innate Intelligence:

Contrary to colonial propaganda, the African mind is not only capable but exceptional. Our history reveals sophisticated governance systems, advanced architecture, mathematical precision, and oral philosophies that rival written traditions by far. Intelligence in the African context is not confined to books alone, it is in how we innovate from nothingness, how we create our world to sit perfectly with nature, how we adapt to challenges, and how we preserve wisdom across generations. This genius is not imported, it is native to us.

When We Look At Our Self-Governance within African Systems:

The claim that Africans cannot govern ourselves is one of the most destructive lies of white supremacy. Our history prior to colonial interference demonstrates thriving kingdoms, trade networks, and conflict-resolution systems uniquely suited to our environments. Even today, when we apply governance aligned with our cultural rhythms rather than imposed foreign models, we flourish. Africans are fully capable of charting our destiny on our land, by our values, for our future.

My Final Word:

White supremacy has no place on African soil because it is an inferior ideology before the strength of our physical identity, the integrity of our spirituality, the brilliance of our intellect, and the legitimacy of our self-governance. Africans are not guests on this land, we are the rightful custodians, the highest order of humanity here, and the architects of its future. It is time that this is made very clear.

29/08/2025

When we speak of African wealth, we must remember that, before capitalism, before colonial tax systems, our people already lived in prosperity.

In the region now called Zambia for instance, cattle among the Tonga and Ila were not simply animals — they were and still are living banks. A man’s herd represented security, dowry, and food for the community. To gift cattle was to circulate wealth, not to lose it. In Barotseland, the Lozi traded fish and grain across the floodplains with remarkable efficiency, ensuring no household starved when waters rose or fell.

In what we now call Malawi, salt was ‘white gold’ — exchanged between highlands and lakeshore communities. In Tanzania, iron smelters supplied tools that became currency across trade routes. And across the continent, networks stretched from Timbuktu to Kilwa, from the Congo Basin to the Indian Ocean. These were pan-African economies long before colonial borders split us apart and gave us tags.

The heart of this system as with all other African systems was balance. Wealth meant sharing, not hoarding. You could never be rich in an African village if your neighbor’s child was hungry. Prosperity flowed in circles, not pyramids. Gifts, bridewealth, harvest-sharing, and communal granaries ensured that wealth returned to the people again and again.

Capitalism, by contrast, thrives on accumulation and scarcity. One rises by outcompeting the other. In our ancestral ways, one rose by uplifting the other. Even those with little were folded into the circle, because survival and dignity were collective responsibilities. This is why elders still say: ‘In the past, no child ate alone, no elder died neglected.’

So I ask you today, let us reimagine and recreate our economics today, not through the lens of endless competition, but through Ubuntu, circulation, and shared prosperity. Cooperation must become the heartbeat of Africa once more.

Our ancestors remind us that wealth is not what you keep, it is what you release back into the world. And on that truth, they outshone capitalism before capitalism even arrived.

27/08/2025

In the land of my ancestors — stretching from the east, all the way into central Africa and beyond, because to me, Africa is one country— governance was never separate from community life. For instance among the numerous Zambian tribes present here today, chiefs were custodians of justice, culture, and wellbeing, not just rulers in isolation. Authority was gained through wisdom, consultation, and accountability, it was neither imposed by force nor by vote.

Decisions were made in councils of elders where voices from different clans, trades, and families were heard. This ensured that no single person dictated the fate of the people; power was shared, transparent, and rooted in service. Scholars and anthropologists, including Jan Vansina and local Zambian historians, document that pre-colonial governance systems were sophisticated, functional, and deeply connected to community ethics — far from the “tribal chaos” narratives often repeat in colonial texts.

The genius of these systems lay in balance and accountability: leaders were bound by oath by both the ancestors and the living, while every member of society had a recognized role. Disputes were resolved through dialogue, customary law, and rituals reinforcing social cohesion.

Today in Zambia, Africans can reclaim these lessons. Whether in our communities, local leadership structures, or even in business, success thrives when it is consultative, ethical, and community-centered. True power is service; legitimacy is something earned, not something assumed. Reflecting on this, I ask: how might we bring these ancestral principles into our daily lives, leadership, and governance today?

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